Borovykovsky, Volodymyr [Borovykovs'kyj], b 4
August 1757 in
Myrhorod in the Poltava region, d 18 April 1825 in Saint Petersburg.
(Portrait: Volodymyr Borovykovsky.) Iconographer and portrait painter, son of
Luka Borovyk (d 1775) who was a Cossack fellow of the banner and an iconographer.
Borovykovsky was trained in art by his father and uncle and then in 1788 went
to study portrait painting under Dmytro H. Levytsky at the Saint Petersburg
Academy of Arts. In 1793 he became an academician there. Until 1787
Borovykovsky lived and worked in Ukraine. During his career he painted many
churches, icons, and iconostases, only some of which have been preserved: the
icons of Christ (1784) and the Virgin Mary (1784 and 1787), now in Kyiv, the
icon of SS Thomas and Basil (1770s, in Myrhorod), the iconostases and wall
paintings in the village churches in Kybyntsi in the Poltava region
and Ichnia in the Chernihiv region, several icons in the Church of Saint
Catherine in Kherson, the religious painting King David (1785), now in
Saint Petersburg, and the iconostasis in the Church of the Holy Protectress in
the village of Romanivka in the Chernihiv region (1814–15).
Borovykovsky's religious art departed from the established norms of Byzantine
iconography in the Russian Empire and tended towards
a realistic approach. Borovykovsky painted about 160 portraits, among them Ukrainian public
figures, including the Poltava burgomaster P. Rudenko (1778), O. Kapnist
(1780), the wife of Oleksander Bezborodko with his daughters (Portrait of O.
Bezborodko with her Daughters, 1803), Bishop M. Desnytsky, the mayor of
Kyiv P. Borshchevsky (1816), Dmytro Troshchynsky (1819), and A. Rodzianko
(1821). Among the large number of official portraits he painted are the
full-figure portraits of Catherine II (Portrait of Catherine II, 1794)
and Paul I (Portrait of Tsar Paul I, 1800), Prince A. Kurakin (Portrait
of Prince Kurakin, 1799), and the Russian poets G. Derzhavin (Portrait
of G. Derzhavin, 1811) and Vasilii Zhukovsky. At the beginning of the 1790s
Borovykovsky began to paint miniatures and portraits of women in the Ukrainian
iconographic style. Adhering to the spirit of classicism, he promoted West
European traditions through his art. The largest number of Borovykovsky's works
can be found in the museums of Saint Petersburg and
Moscow. In Ukraine they can be seen in the museums of Kyiv, Kharkiv, Odesa,
Poltava, Dnipropetrovske, Kherson, and Symferopil. A few of his paintings are
in the United States.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Shcherbakivs'kyi, D.; Ernst, F. Ukraïns'kyi portret: Vystavka
ukraïns'koho portretu XVII–XX st. (Kyiv 1925)
Chukin, D. Borovykovs'kyi (Kharkiv 1931)
Mashkovtsev, N. Vladimir Lukich Borovikovskii. 1757–1825 (Moscow
1950)
Alekseeva, T. Borovikovskii (Moscow 1960)
Bilets'kyi, P. Ukraïns'kyi portretnyi zhyvopys XVII–XVIII st.
(Kyiv 1969)
Alekseeva, T. Vladimir Lukich Borovikovskii i russkaia kul'tura na rubezhe
18-19 vekov (Moscow 1975)
Sviatoslav Hordynsky